Cosmic Region Studio

Cosmic Region Studio

Cosmic Region Studio
Astrophotographer from Northwest Indiana! Thanks for admiring! 🌌

11/04/2024

🎡One shot at glory🎢

Probably my favorite image so far, the very moment the eclipse ended. A diamond ring and solar prominences πŸ’ŽπŸ”₯

Photos from Cosmic Region Studio's post 10/04/2024

The solar prominences are probably my favorite thing about a solar eclipse, it is the reddish looking spikes on the edges.

What I wasn't expecting was you were able to see one of them with the naked eye during totality and that is burned into my brain forever.

Most of my images have a red tint due to astro modding my camera (fixed it on these two) and I can argue the prominences stick out much more because of it! Hope you guys are enjoying my images I still have a few more to show later in the week πŸ˜β˜€οΈπŸŒ‘

09/04/2024

Taken at Lake Lemon Bloomington, Indiana. Venus is the pale white dot in the sky as well β˜€οΈ

12/03/2024

Comet 12P/Pons-Brooks (A.K.A The "Devil Comet") is slowly approaching closer to The Sun each day, and is also very close to The Andromeda Galaxy as of this week! I went to the beach to get a nice clear horizon and it so happened that my shot was right above Chicago! It will most likely be naked eye visible in a couple weeks and "possibly" visible during totality of the upcoming solae eclipse (I am not betting on it though).

Taken at Indiana Dunes National Park Kemil Beach: March 10th, 2024

Thanks for admiring and I appreciate anyone to share this 🌌

12/03/2024

So when I did the Gemini constellation I saw this faint little red bubble at the bottom of my image so i imaged it laat night

Didnt know there was a red nebula in between those orange stars! I think this field of space looks really cool πŸ™‚

Monkey Head Nebula at the bottom, Jellyfish Nebula near the left, and M35 star cluster at the top πŸŒŒβ™ŠοΈ

Photos from Cosmic Region Studio's post 09/03/2024

The zodiac constellation of Cancer:

Oof...this constellation is right next to Gemini, but I can gurantee a majority of you have never seen it because it is practically invisible around Northwest Indiana. The stars are so dim that I had to reeeeeally brighten up the brightest stars that make up the zodiac.

Cancer is literally the dimmest zodiac of them all but its saving grace is the two star clusters that lie within it: M44 in the epicenter and M67 to the top left.

Because M44 is so massive and beautiful in a telescope, I will not rank it so low

08/03/2024

It is cloudy tonight, but for most of the month of March, The constellation of Gemini is directly above our heads. I used a fog filter to try and brighten up the main stars...I need a better fog filter to truly show the star brightness.

This is my first real zodiac constellation image and just some notable things in Gemini: There is a little star cluster above the foot called M35, and to the left of the same foot is this faint red bubble. I have no clue what it is but I will try and image it next week I think. Had I not astro mod the camera, I doubt id pick that up at all!

I always liked this constellation because as Spring comes to end, it starts to set with the sun (hence why Gemini season is in June), and it just lets me know the weather is getting warmer πŸ™‚πŸŒŒ

Photos from Cosmic Region Studio's post 07/03/2024

I wanted to show you guys the difference of field of views with my new full frame camera and my other crop sensor camera

Both images use the same focal length lens, which pretty much determines your magnification/field of view on your camera, but the full frame sensor gives you a much wider field of view. Just wanted to show that it is really a massive difference to me, and makes me excited for Milky Way photos for the summer time 😁

01/03/2024

The Rosette Nebula with my astro modded camera came out clean 😁😁😁

24/02/2024

Massive sunspot today! If you have solar glasses you can see it without any magnification, which doesnt happen very often!

Photos from Cosmic Region Studio's post 23/02/2024

So I did a 6 month long experiment:

Back in August we had 2 "super moons" which just means the moon is in "perigee" or closest to Earth in its orbit. Apogee is when it is furthest away from its orbit (micro moon).

Well these are both at the same focal length taken, both cropped evenly at a 1:1 ratio or 800x800 and you can see there is a literal difference in sizes from each other

It is a slight difference but i think thats pretty cool πŸŒ•

20/02/2024

Had an 83% moon phase last night and the new modified camera still gave me a clean image!

The Horsehead and Flame Nebula in the Constellation 🌌

18/02/2024

First photo of the page!
The Great Orion Nebula
This is around 3 hours of data in a light polluted sky. Hopefully sometime in the future I will explain the process of astrophotography and how this is achieved 🌌

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